While it seemed like Fargo’s first season had one of the best casts on TV, Season 2 is already looking like it’ll eclipse it. And as it happens, Bruce Campbell will play a big part in making this next season amazing.

Ryan Murphy’s hotly anticipated new series American Crime Story: The People v. O.J. Simpson has cast some huge names to appear during Season 1 of the FX program. One of those huge names is Nashville star Connie Britton.

Sons of Anarchy featured a bunch of characters that I'll likely forever miss, and there will always be that fictional regret that I can never kick back and pound a few with anybody on the show. So here are the ten characters I'd want to get sloshed with the most.

American Horror Story has been picked up for Season 5, and this morning the next series in the American Horror Story franchise officially started to announce cast members, and wouldn’t you know, Lady Gaga has taken a role in the TV dram

For Sons of Anarchy fans, it’s already been a long two months since the series came to its bitter conclusion. Luckily, creator Kurt Sutter has The Bastard Executioner on the way, and it just filled out its cast with True Blood’s Stephen Moyer and 11 more actors.

Not that I’ve ever been invited, but remind me to be wary about opening any closets inside Billy Crystal’s house, as there might just be a horny bear lurking within. To find out what my uncoded words mean, check out the new trailer for Crystal’s new FX series.

As if we needed more reasons to remember to tune into Ryan Murphy's upcoming series American Crime Story: The People v. O.J. Simpson, the show has added another actor to its star-studded roster, filling the role of defense attorney Johnny Cochran.

While its seasonal criminals come and go, Justified is good at keeping its most enjoyable side characters around. One character who joined things late in the game is Mary Steenburgen’s Katherine Hale, who arrived in Season 5 as a mysterious widow seeking revenge.

With only a few minor tweaks, the American Horror Story: Freak Show finale “Curtain Call” would serve as a perfect reunion special for this season, had it ended at Episode 12 for some reason. Gone are the conversations between Neil Patrick Harris and his sex-watching ventriloquist dummy, and in are the time-jumps, wrap-ups and happily-ever-afters.

While network television is still competing for as many eyeballs as possible, some of the cable networks are trying to resonate with viewers in other ways. Recently, a research department compiled a study of the Top 10 lists from critics and determined there are three networks that stand out on “best of” lists.

Raylan and Boyd’s antagonistic relationship has been years in the making. The two men were friends when they worked in the mines as young men. Later, their relationship became more antagonistic, but , the two men are often and unexpectedly connected. Here's where their relationship is leading into Season 6.

This week, the unadulterated strangeness that is American Horror Story: Freak Show will be taking down its tents and moving on into the back of our collective consciousness. But just because Season 5 is another ten months away, there’s no reason to avoid talking about it.

FX has been busy promoting the last installation of the drama, but apparently even showrunner Graham Yost is unsure how the show’s ultimate standoff between Deputy Marshall Raylan Givens and outlaw Boyd Crowder will actually end.

In its four years, American Horror Story has gone through some cyclical storytelling, hitting on the same beats time and again, sometimes intentionally and sometimes probably less so. But Danny Huston is back! And this episode had a scene that disturbed me more than any other this season.

There’s no show on television that makes me want to drink alcohol more than It’s Always Sunny In Philadelphia. Sure, booze always makes their problems worse, but it’s not about the final result. It’s about how much drunken fun they have before waking up. It’s about living in the moment, and no one lives in the moment like these idiots.